Category: Review

  • David Ira Cleary’s “Dr. Abernathy’s Dream Theater”

    David Ira Cleary’s “Dr. Abernathy’s Dream Theater” is a fun short story that borrows stylistically from the proto-SF of Wells and other nineteenth century authors, and thematically from steampunk SF.

    The story’s narrator is a drug addicted former professor by the name of Dr. Jaromir Stavan who lives in an alternate world reminiscent of the late nineteenth century with a dash of early twentieth century automobiles. Stavan, through chance, is introduced to the title’s Dr. Abernathy and his Dream Theater, where a special apparatus allows for the improvisational reproduction of one’s dreams by actors. In the background of the story, there is a rivalry between a Dr. Orestel and Dr. Abernathy. These competitors in the realm of psychology and dream interpretation make me think of later comparisons of Freud and Jung (including exile from their homeland and the oppressive “Revolutionary Council,” which sounds a lot like Nazi German in the context of the story). Dr. Abernathy shares an fascinating insight into his line of work:

    We are cartographers, Stavan. We explore the world of dreams, find its landmarks, boundaries, its cities and its empty spaces (48).

    Stavan reports that:

    The Dream Theater brings to center stage our internal dramas, where they can be recorded by independent observers and then scrutinized beneath the arc-lamps of objectivity (51).

    The Dream Theater is a fascinating technological invention for the story. Like Ted Chiang, Cleary constructs a logical explanation for the way the invention works in his alternate world despite its conflict with our world. The author’s invoking the language of science is necessary to bridge the story to our understanding of the universe as well as report on the continual breaking down of objectivity in a post-quantum theory reality. Clearly, the world of the story is disconnected from ours. Therefore, the rules and universal laws may be different.

    This is an enjoyable story with a twist or two that makes it a joy to read. I recommend you check it out in Interzone #210.

  • Steven Francis Murphy’s “Tearing Down Tuesday”

    Steven Francis Murphy’s debut story, “Tearing Down Tuesday” in Interzone 210 (June 2007) is a fantastic tale that hits some heavy real life subject matter in the apocalyptic future following the Singularity.

    It’s about a teenager, Kyle, who’s grown up with the stigmata of being an abused child. His dead father’s sins recur when Kyle is older and abused by Traveling Reverend Caldwell J. Robinson. However, the reader is led to believe that Kyle choses to be victimized in order to earn money to purchase his only friend, the robot named Tuesday. Unfortunately, sexual abuse and victimization is not a clear cut issue, and Murphy does a masterful job of presenting the dilemma and rationalization Kyle has to undertake in order to survive in the attempt to save his robot friend.

    I definitely recommend this story to everyone. It does have mature and graphic subject matter, but the story’s frankness and honesty might also serve an awareness raising function for those not personally familiar with sexual abuse.

  • Candas Jane Dorsey’s “(Learning About) Machine Sex”

    Candas Jane Dorsey’s “(Learning About) Machine Sex” is a feminist cyberpunk story about a female programmer who deconstructs the orgasm into feedback binary data. It was first published in 1988 in the author’s collection, Machine Sex and Other Stories.

    The story begins:

    A naked woman working at a computer. Which attracts you most? It was a measure of Whitman that, as he entered the room, his eyes went first to the unfolded machine gleaming small and awkward in the light of the long-armed desk lamp; he’d seen the woman before.

    Angel was the woman. Thin and pale-skinned, with dark nipples and black pubic hair, and her face hidden by a dark unkempt mane of long hair as the leaned over her work.

    […] So she has a new board, thought Whitman, and felt his guts stir the way they stirred when he first contemplated taking her to bed.

    On one level, the story is about the buying and selling of intellectual property. However, this is problematized when it involves an individual, Angel, who is the sole person developing sought after technology and the fruits of her work (Greek mythology–creation/birth as an eruption from the head) are tied to the company she helped develop. Unfortunately, the company was owned by a man, Whitman, who tells her that he sold it, including her, to a competitor, and he does this after having sex with her. To a misogynist like Whitman, Angel is a commodity to be bought and sold–an object to possess and control through the politics of sexual relationships. He styles himself into her pimp who uses as well as abuses her.

    When Angel escapes to her hidden homestead in the secluded Rocky Mountain House, she invites a cowboy over (who’s never named in the story) for drinks. They begin talking, and after showing him her new program, Machine Sex, they debate whether it would sell or not. She believes that it will, because from her experience and point of view, people are empty and incapable of love. The cowboy, who happens to be gay (Annie Proulx’s “Brokeback Mountain” was first published nine years after Dorsey’s story), defends love and decries Machine Sex.

    Their debate gets interesting when Angel talks about the vacancy of love based on her real life experiences, but the cowboy dismisses her troubles with love and people like Whitman as “politics.” But the thing is that sex and sexual power is a political power struggle. The politics of sex and gender relations is not something that should be dismissed. In fact, Angel appropriates the male dominated sexual political framework by creating Machine Sex, which will undermine the system through short circuiting the orgasmic feedback loop.

    This is recommended reading. I found it in The Norton Book of Science Fiction.

  • Frederik Pohl and C. M. Kornbluth’s “Critical Mass”

    Frederik Pohl and C. M. Kornbluth’s “Critical Mass” is a fantastic extrapolative story about the seemingly eternal, but teetering on paradigmatic shift, Cold War. Pohl and Kornbluth often collaborated together until Kornbluth’s death in 1962, and this story is an excellent example of their cooperative work.

    The story is set in 1998, and the Cold War is reaching a crisis point. Politicians are using the extended war to their advantage by providing false hopes through long term, but fruitless programs to save the American people from missiles coming over the North Pole. However, the lack of a preemptive strike by either side is leading up to crisis, because the statistical probability of a strike under protracted war increases.

    The authors map the story’s characters to the physical components of a fission chain reaction. There are the energetic neutrons with apparently new discoveries and prophecy that strike nuclei, which perpetuates the chain reaction began by the pile attaining critical mass.

    There are some interesting points that I’d like to make about the story. One pertains to the way in which women are portrayed in the story. In this future, the present follows on a failed, or at best semi-successful, “Female Integration” that began through the efforts of a previous president and his “Century of the Common Woman” plan. Two women characters in the story epitomize this through dressing like men, and one holding a corncob pipe. There is also the mention of integrated sports teams and jail lockups. In the case of sports teams, integration means a level playing field of equal numbers of men and women but with a chauvinistic slant:

    There wasn’t anything really wrong with Female Integration. Maggie wasn’t a nut. Take baseball. why that was the Integrationist’s major conquest, when women demanded and got equal representation on every major-league team in spite of the fact that they could not throw or run on competitive terms with men (213).

    Despite integration, women are still treated as less than men. Given that the rest of the story is satirical, I believe the authors were not promoting feminist ideals by projecting such an antifeminist viewpoint.

    The story also has connections to our current Global War on Terrorism milieu. The Democratic Part is called the “Party of Treason,” which sounds like something you’d hear on Fox News (215). Also, saying “politicians” or talking about politics is considered obscene in this future America. In fact, obscenities in general are severely looked down upon.

    The current administration’s desire for a missile defense system is analogous to the debate going on within the story. The party in power supports the construction of civilian shelters to protect America’s population in the event of an attack. However, the president remembers an atomic weapons training movie he saw in the National Guard that depicted a desert wasteland following a strike. He muses why there is a need for shelters when there will be nothing left to return to. Senator Harkness reminds the President that:

    We slapped CSB [Civilian Shelter Bill] in our platform, and we won…You know, you never get credit in this game for what you’ve done. Only for what you’re going to do. And, hell, Brad,’ he crowed, suddenly exultant as a child who found a dime in the street, ‘this thing is good for years (220)!

    Like the current American administration, there’s a lot of money being spent and a lot of talk, but there hasn’t been that many solid results, and there’s never been a solid explanation of why a defense system is needed as urgently in the Post-Cold War world.

    Another topic is incarceration. When several characters are caught in an air raid drill, they realize that they don’t have their required emergency equipment:

    The roundup had bagged nearly fifty hardened criminals, like Denzer and Maggie, caught flagrantly naked of dosimeters and next-0f-kin tags. There were a surly lot…Office girls, executives, errand boys, even one hangdog ARP guard himself; they were a motley assortment (223).

    This criminalization of preparedness sounds akin to the current American administration’s imposing and promotion of “diligence.” If they could have, I suspect that the Patriot Act would have a few lines devoted to providing for scapegoats who weren’t diligent enough in stopping future terrorist attacks.

    A final note concerns baseball. Everyone in this future are so concerned about the All-Star game, that a mathematician figures out that the feared first strike will occur during the big game when everyone’s eyes are turned in the other direction. American’s preoccupation with ephemeral things is a boon to opportunistic persons in politics and democracy takes a punch to the gut for it.

    This is a great story to read, because it has much to say to our present even though it’s drenched in Cold War narrative.

    I found the story in Frederik Pohl’s The Eighth Galaxy Reader, but you can also find it in these other collections.

    Wikipedia has detailed entries on Fredrik Pohl and Cyril M. Kornbluth, as well as one on “Critical Mass” that has a scan of the cover of Galaxy magazine where the story first appeared.

  • John Scalzi’s The Android’s Dream Review

    I received my copy of the SFRA Review (#279, Jan/Feb/March 2007) today, and my review of John Scalzi’s The Android’s Dream is in there! It’s good to see my work in print.

    About the book: it’s funny, but it’s not about androids despite the author aping the title from Philip K. Dick’s Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep? You can read more about the book on the author’s site here.